SIXTY SIXTH YEAR. NO. 10.
OUR COUNTRY, MAY SHE EVER ^ KRmT, BUT RIGHT OIJ WRONG, OUR COUNTRY."
SALISBURY. N. (X. THURSDAY, JULY 2!i, 1897.
ESTABLISHED
V1
Noted Washinfftor!
CJ
Sunday Discourse,
For C'heerfnlii,..!;*—Thv,>,>
tioii!i For the rii(» of t*UKiness J)e- | domestic
l,r*.».iion: , ,i,j£ Forverijjition
Will get not only spiritual profit, but he
will get paid liack in hard cash or in (jop?
vertfhle .secu'rUie.s. We oHe” 5cC rXeii who
r,, - , "'^.’^'nYUjii.-.icu wno seem to get along with
u I Vine S i Hieir investments very profitably, notwith-
• siaiidiug ail their parsimony. But wait.
.Suddenly in that man’s hi,story every.'
thing eoe® tVrch^. iii.s health fails,
01 hi.s reason is dethroned, or a
curse smites him, or a mid-
nlk’ht shadow of some kind drops upon
J. BULL S XKW BREAM,
aud I oiiauow >M ftuuio KHUl UTOP*
It^hnU.or, l-rop.-r t hri..^ti!i,i Inve,..!- i !V'''U";” Li.S bu.sinos.s. What iS
iiieiit, anil a flreat
or Cod-IIver Oil With Hypophos-
phitcs, ca.n be taken as easily in
summer as in winter. Unlike the
plain oil it is palatable, and the
hypophosphites that are in it aid in
digestion and at the same time tone
Sip the system.
For sickly, delicate children, and
for those whose lungs arc affected,
it is a mistake to leave it off in the
summer months. The dose may be
reduced if necessary.
recommend the small size
especially for summer use, and fof
children, where a smaller dose is re
quired. It sfiould be kept in a cool'
place after it is once opened.
For iii o by ai: drujigists at 50a and 5:.c»
M)i;MI SIATU (HIPS.
1 liH ■'tutib Will not ii.se the I>tiBsorietf«
Toro.'i'.‘'...i of h;i!iijg cottun,
I >r. \ n il)!' ^^eulls, r native of ( aburus,
Las I'. i'ii api oiii(*'d full Hurgeoii iu the
! nitf I Stiiti.ti Uiivf and assigned to the
1 he Atb,lit,i Constitution learns that
rlie i 'l iniiliM' Haptist ('iiurcli at CiroldH-
b;‘ro liu'i la.(.;i I,r Lite used as agambliug
den ill ilje 'voe’ii dav,'".
Hi>b. )|' XY. \\. liimeanis to preside
Hi t lie confei I’uce of the A*h«ville di.s-
ti i t. M. i.. ( Inirrh, South, to be held
at I ;f. ^•r\ille, August and 8.
I he Ciec-u>!)oro .'dlk mil! will have
.Sl.Giiogioo eaintal.^ \Vi«e.n the plant was
at I'aterson, N. us inanv as IjOOi)
}ie.'-.son.- were etni'loyed in the mill.
The pre-sent grand jury finds that
At uke county's court house is a dlrt.v'
pla.-'R and a juror says tiie jury room is
like a hiig pen. - ('harlutle Observer.
A citizenof W'in.ston is working on an
umbri'Iia attachment which is intended
to 01 "late u fan for the comfort of the
pede.-ti iaii us lie trudges along beneath
the c.i prt'ssive rays of our summer suu.
— 'I he Hepublican.
ary (Jnion. a uegve •vVoman has re-
eoived notice )’r'm U/ashiugtou that she
has been appointed postmistress for
Tar Meek JUaden county. Mrs. T. B.
.;.uoiiibuu, a white widow has been ac
ceptably lining ibis jiosition.
iiegan lute on ;i Small Capital.
1 Wo wliitc-huireu old Women were
flitting together in u Lake .street ile-
'ated train tlie other afternoon and
disi iissihg tlieir grown-up children,
nays a i.'iiicago paper. Tlie son of one
of tin- two pas,';e}igT«, n dignified-look
Ing man, sat a fi-w .‘.leats in front 01
■hem lea'iing a newspaper.
■'.'•'ov., there i.s \Yilliam.” said the
iiiiuuer, iinddiiig in tfi.' direction of 'he
man with tin* paiier. “See ho'y well he
has gotten along In life. lie says ho is
'.viir;h alrta'idy, and oxiieots to
ilonMo it If he lives fifften years
iong.r.''
“Vi'S.” ,saiii Tile utlieimihl lady, “and
he began lil'i- in a vefj" small way.
iliun'i h'‘'.'"
“Well, I should say In* did,’ was the
answer. “He only \\>'’.glu‘(l six pounds,
and .bd;n and 1 never thought we
'\.inl(l raise him.'' Tlie old lady never
und"! .stcod why the ]ia>sengeri, smiled
when they heard her words.
I ■e.iii. etici’t m;iu found a gold coLn
In a h:i>> t'.ie other day and a New York
gdl dUei,v.M-ed. a dir.mond ring in a
bmk's soiuiacli. W'e are please1 to
greet thi se iild fi-ieiiiLs at the outset of
an ahfr siiriug se.i.son of juunstakLug
I'leWiri'-aiiiui.
ONE OF TWiWAYSl
I Ilf b'ailer was created for one pur-
po-e. p.uiiejy. a I’eceptacle for t lie urine
ami as >iieii jj not lialde to any form
‘d di-e,ise exeept hy ntie ,if two wav.s.
I lie first u,iy i-, imiierfeet action
"t t lie k idneys. T’lie sccoml wav is :
ti'Uii careless loeal treatment of other j
di-'i'.'me,-. I
CHIEF CAUSE I
Unhealthy urine from unhealthy
kidiiet s j-I h,. rhi-d'eanse of Irladder
I r(.puli!>'. So I he Womb, like the blad-
d‘ i. ci.cat,..(l fur one ]iui'i»ose. and j
:t led l|oe|,ll■^.(l f,„, niuch is not liaitle j
to \\e;ikiii i)i-(jj..i.;)se. exct'pt in rare!
c.iv, II i->ii ii,.|i,.(] haek of and veiy I
C l I'. '" Hic hiadder. t hcrefore any pa in |
.o.'ie- inci.iivituiifnce manifested in
lei '. hack. Idaddci'or urinary i*a.s-
' I." often, hv misiake. attrihuted
■Ilia!e wi'akiie-s or womh trouble
'iiievori. d'he error is easily a-
d’o tind out eorrectlv. .set
iiii-itii I., i Hod is iHlai.shing tiitn for his
... I g. i aninii ppnytejne.ssj He fried It chert dda.
Text; “• V. Iicri fori* doth a liyinV si.-iy j Ri'id, Hi u worsted hlui. So tliat one of the re-
corn]il;iin''”_E,a[,ie;a;itir,n'- iii., j'j. j eipcs fur thecureof individual and national
A el),.,o.te) in the nio>t mel
na
an arm
Mil I'.'l' hoolc of the iiilili.! Ji remiuliwroti*
■I' niany .sad thiijgri that we liave a word
iiiimed after Jiirn. and when anything i.s
fcuroh.argi.'d witli grief and coinidaint we
eall it a jeremiad, hat iu my text .Ter,d.
ini,ill, as by a .sinlden jidi, wakens u.s to a
th.od.fiil spirit (iiir Ijli-.ssings a re* so nincl’.
morn inime''..ii^ tlian out iJese?t.-‘ ih.'tt lir is
S(irpri.-.eil tlii’t ein luiiiy siiould ever find
t.anlt Tlaving iite and with it a thon-
^.aiul lde.ssing.s it oiigdit to Imsliiuto perpet-
lial silep.M- everything like eritleii^m isf tim
dealiiig.s of Oo.r. •• W!.,-v,.p,,.,,
man cen'i-lstr. • 1
B idle everything in rmr national linanees |
IS hrig.ic.iiing. f,>r the last few veans the j
land lia.s be,;u .set to the tniie of •'Naomi.’'
J here Jias been here ami tliel,, u .-htierfill
soloist, but the gran.I ehorii.n ha..i i.eeti one
of lameutatien, a, -,nupaiiied livdirges over
prc.strnted ^•ommer-e sileui I'lnunta, tri*-jf-3
Uneinpleyed meehajjUt". r.mi all those dil
orders .lesce;!,. ,; py the two .sliort words,
■•bard limes.'’ Tim la.-t i.s that iinve
been paying for the blo.elr luxury of war
morF thaiiRi^iii'ty ’"ear;- ago. Tiier,' were
ipjcat unfjdhai dill, rem es, and wc had not
-f’liGugh ('^risPan elmraeler to .settle them
by arbitrtition and 1 reatv. amj go wc went
into battle, expending lif.-'ana.tp.s.snre uml
'.veil nigh swamping • iie nhtlonai linauees
and nnrr]. ai',' r-uiitli, east and west, have
ever since been paying for those four years’
indulgenee in barbarism.
But tile time lias eome when 'iJ’ uepre.s-
sion ought i,> ei,, when it will end if
r le peepj,, willing 10 do two or three
t.iiigs by Way of lln.ue.’ial meilieam.'nf. for
tbe iieopb., a.s \vil as I'oiigr.'ss mu.st join in
tin* work of rO‘.-!iperati ii'. 'Idpi best politi
cal economists tell imtliiit lln r,- is ne
r.ntsou for e.'nidi-o.' |.'ostmtion. Plenty
ot m.'tmv ?>v .;.,:tij,g iuve.stment. The
tional I'leaith wiHi ni vi-r so .stroii
or So ‘dear a brain. Yet we go on groaning,
gromiiug, groaning, as though (lod had
jiiit this natiou npo’a gm. l m,,! ell.'-tri-d
but one ,lm'ru! tv..ai^;v,,
The 'aei '-.‘h,- habit of eoniplainiug lias
bomij-m ehronb- in this country, .and after
all the.se years of widmper and 'wailing ami
objnrgaiion we an-under-.e.'j'i momentuiu
of snivtd ile'i \' e eannot stoji.
t ilc're.are are three pre.serijdious bv whieli
i beiievt' that onr imlividual ami National
linanees may beeure.l of their jiresent d!-
pre.ssion. 'i'he first is ehcrful eonversji-
lion and beJiavic' 1 iiuvo m.'tieed Ihal the
people who i'.ri' mo.-.l v.ieif.-rims Cga'n.rt the
da\ in whieh wi‘ live nf-.. those who are in
comfortahl.'rii.-.umstan.--s. I Ip-ivo made
imj-airyof tho.se [lersoms wlio are violent in
their jermniad.s against these times, aud 1
have asked them, ••Now, after all. are you
not making a livingV’ After rcm,. liesiia-
tiuu and e,.,,g|.i,ig eleariug their throat
three 01^ tour lim.-s tliey say stammeringly,
^ witii a great multitude ol
people it is not a tpaestion of getting a.
livelihood, but rhey.-ie .lissatisiie.lbecause
tiiey I make as mueli money as they
‘.Vt.iuid like to makic Tliey have only
erZOOO in the bank, wliere they would like
to have .TlhOO. Tlm.v eaii clear iu ;) year
only •'raOIID, wle'u i.hej wo'ild iiivo ip cjoar
^"lO.OOil, or tilings .'i.im-i* out even. Or
in their tra.le they get s-.'! ;■ .jay when' they
wish, they could make ..jj. ijr ^n, “fih ’’
saj-s some one, ••ar,‘yon n.,t a ware o.( the
fact that ther,. m a gr.'at poi>ulatiou out of
employment, and there are luindreds of
the good families of thi.s eountry who are
at their wits' end, n^t knowing whieli wav
to turn' Yes. 1 know it better tlmu any
nuui iu private life .-an know that sad fact,
for it eoinea .'oiistnuth, to my eye and ear’
but who is respousibje for tins statu of
things?
Much of th.at re.siion.sibifily I put upon
men in comfortable ('ireuinstancos who by
uu everlasting gr.'wiiug keei. public cootj.
dpuee doiire.sse.i anii new ''iitc.rpri.ses ftonl
starting out and jie’.v .houses from beings
built. You know very well that one de-
bpomient man ean talk tifrv te.-g
spondenCy. w[iOj ..heerful physician
can Wane up into e.xh.ilaration a wli.jle a.sy-
lum of hvpoehoudriae.B. [i is no kindness
^otlio poor or the liiiempl.iyeil for y.into
join iu tins deiibii-atioe. If v,jn |.a.ve Iiol.
the wit and the .■.■mmon sense to think of
Bomefliing 'dte..;fiii 1 1 s,..y, then ket!|isilent.
Now I V.-jll make a .-onTraet. If the peo
ple ot the L nited .states tor one week will
talk choerfiilly. 1 will open all the manu-
factorie.s, 1 will give eaiploynient to all the
unoccupied men ami women, I wiil make a
liyely market for your real e-r.ite that is
eating you up Wi! ll taxes, 1 will sto|i the
long proeessions ('ll tin'wiiy ti' the poot-
house ami the p.'n;i.;uilar> and I will spread
a I'lenliful table from Ylaim' to (.'alifornia
and from Oregon to .Sandy il(.ok, and the
whole Ian.i shall carol aud thunder with
national jul'ilet'. But say.s some one, • ]
will take I hat eonlraet but ••■e '.■nu t "ITeet
tin* ■'vhule uiuion. ' -Tiy bearers and read-
er.s, r.'j'reseuting as yoii do all iirofessious,
all trades and all ciec-upations, if
you should res'dye never again to utter
H dolorous word about the money
markets, but by manner and by voice
and by wit nml ■uitieature and, above
all, by fnitii in Hod to try to s.-.-ilter tlii.s
national .gloom, ibt you not believe the iu-
llueni-(' would lie instantaneous and wide
spread? The eileet Would be felt arouud
tlie world. Tor (.od'ssake andfur the sake
of the ijoor and for the sakt* of the em-
}doyed (juit growling. Jiej.end upon it, if
you men in oomfurtal'le c•ir.•unlstances do
not stii'p ('I'lni'iaiiiing. (lod will blast your
harvests aud see how yon will get along
without a corn crop, and He will .sweepyou
with Hoods, and lie will devour yon with
grasshoiifiers, and He will Inirn your city.
If you men iu com fortnble eiremiistaiiee.s
keei' on eomjdainiii,g, Hud will give you
something to com plain about. Ylark that!
Tlie second pres.Ti'itioii for the alleyi.-i-
tiou of liiian.'ial disiress is jiroper Cliris-
tlan iiivestinenl. God demands of every
individual state and imtion a certain ]iro-
portiou of their ineoine. We are parsimo
nious. We kee[i ).aek from God that which
belongs to him, and when we keep back
nnytliing from God he takes w iint we keep
hack, ami lie takes more. He takes it by
storm, by sii-kness, by liuukniptey, by any
limine...s is more generosity. Where you
bestowed .■¥! on tlie cause of Christ give $2,
fiod loves to be trusted, and he is very apt
to trust back again. He says: “That man
knows how to handle money. He shall have
more money to handle.” And very .soon
the property that was on the market for a
great while,gets a in'roluaser, rtndtheboml
Midt Ad.s not tVorth more than litty cents
on a (lollar goes to piar, and the opening of
a new street doubles the valeecf hiG house,
or in any waj of a million God blesses him.
Once the man finds out tliat secret and
j he goes on to fortune. Tliere are men
I tvhoin I have known wlio f)r ten yeiirs have
been trying to pay God g-lOOO. The.y have
never been able to get it paid, for just as
they were taking out from one fold of theirV
pofkf't.book a bill my.steriously .soineliiiw iu
SEES A f " -ILUTION DEVAS-
TATIWi. THE REPUBLIC.
Expects to Slep in at the Proper Time
and Seize .v cything in Sight—flie
.Presence .i Prosperity Would lie
%nVe Trt pn,. .''s I'ttrpose*
Perh&p.s the ■' i^h is the father to the
thought with i.im v.H'iter of the follow
ing editorial trom our uki'a-conservu-
j tire Euglish nai England, notwith-
i standing her piotestatlons of peace,
i -would like to sec this republic disnipt-
1 P(i. It is not to be -wondered at that
! the pi'ess of England is somefitnes car-
j ried away v.uth enthusiasm when -wrif-
' ing over the roisfonunes that are be-
I sotting thus p.jople. England hates us.
j We are her commercial rivals and will
i'wcrld if peace and unity prevail here.
I The continued hard times here gives
.mm other fold of their puoketbook there ! Englishmen great encouragement.
ni'i
kill
•'.in
ii> 1
(d -
VI di!
"lit urine for twenty four
li"nr: a x'dinieut (ir settling indicate
kidney or bladder trouble. The mild
and the e.xtraordinary effect of Dr.
Kiliner's .'wamp-Koot the great kid
ney ;ind hlatlder remedy is .soon realiz-
ifi. If yon need a medicine you
sliiiiLd have tlii. he-t. At firiiggists
fit! y Cent - ;i iifl (,tie d( iiinr. Y'oii ma.v
ha’.e a 'amide lngtle and pamphlet.
Le’.listnt tree hy mail. Mention the
\Y.xT('HMAN'aod .send your addrpssto Dr
Kiliiiet X" Co.. Binghamton, y. A'.
’The pn'prietors (if this piaper guaran
tee the g-nulnene.s.s of this offer.
^'say.s the Philadelphia Lel,ger: ‘’We
or piiii hasc ;uba.‘’ Neither will
Ls may as well l>e uuderaUHxl
one of th(' 10,000 ways whieh he can eni-
jiloy. Th(’ rea.son many of vou are* cramped
in bnsiu(“.'S i.s beeainii? you liave never
learned the Itx'.'ou of Christian generosity.
You employ an agent. Y'(>u give him a
reasonable salary, ami, lo, you find out
that ho is appr.ipriating your funds, be
sides the salary. Wliat do you do? Dis
charge him. Well, w'i are God's agents.
He puts in our hands certain, mon
eys. Part is to bis ours, part is to be
His. Sujtpose we take all, what then?
Ho will diseliargo u.'. He will turn us over
to financial disasters and take the trust
away from us. Tlie reason tliat great multi
tudes are not jirospered in hnsiuess is sim
ply beeauso they have been withholding
from God that which belongs to Him.
The rule is, give and you will receive, ad
minister liberally and you shall liave mure
to administer. I am iu full sympathy with
tlie mau who was to l>e baptized by immer
sion, and some one said, “You had better
leave your pocketbook out; it will get wet.”
‘•No," sai'l he, “I want to go down under
the wave with everything. I want to eou-
seerute my property and all to God.” Ami
so he was baiuized. What we want in this
country is mor(* baptized pocketbooks.
The only safe investment that a man
can make iu this world is iu the cause of
Christ. If a man give from a superabun
dance, God may i>r lie may not respond
■with a bli'ssing. but if a mau give until ho
feels it, if a man give until it fetches the
Idood. if a man give until his selfishness
cringes aud twists and 0(jwer3 under it, he
came, !> larger bill. Yoi! fell nn? that i’h.i-i.s-
♦ian generosity pays iu the world to come.
I tell you it pays now, pay.s in Jiard Civsh,
pays in Government 3ecurit[(;s. I'ou do
not b.'rlieve it? Ah, that is what keeps you
back. I know yim did not lielieve it. The
whole world iindwlhristendom is to be re
constructed on this subject, and a.-s you are
a part of Christendom let the work begin
in your own soul, ‘‘But.” say.s some oue,
“T d([n’T bsllevd that Iheorj, beeauso J.
have been generous and I have been losing
money for ten years.” Then God prepahi
>on, that is all.
iVopUnRote a.s a joke what is a divine
premise. “Cast thy bread upon the waters,
and it will return to thee after many days.”
^^'hat did God mean by that? Tliere is an
allusion there. In Egypt when they sow
the corn it is at a time when the Nile is
(ivurtiowing its bsuk.s. ‘‘ml tbeic sow the
seed colh'on tlie waters, and as tlie Nile be
gins to recede this seed corn strikes iu the
earth aud comes ufi a harvest, and that is
t he allusion. It seems as if they are tlirow-
iii.g tlie corn away on the waters, but after
awliib* they gather it up in a liiirvest. Now
say:j God in His word, ‘‘Cast thy bread
II pun the waters, and it sliall come
lati-k to thee after many days.” It may
seem to you that you are throwing it away
ou eharitle.il, hut It wiil yield a harvest of
green and gold—a harvest on earth and a
Imrvest in lieaven. If men could appre-
eiate that aud act on that, ive w'ould have
nu more trouble about iudividual or na
tional linanees.
I’l'cs.-riptlon the third, for the cure of all
0111 individual and national financial di.s*
tresses, p great .“piritual awakening. It is
no mere theory. TIk? nlerohauts of this
country were posilivel.y demented ivlth tlia
nionetat-y excitement in 18.’57. There never
bi.'fure nor since has been such a state of
liuam.'ial deiiressiou as there was at ttiat
tiuK'. A revival eame, aud .500,000 people
were born into the kingdom of God, What
c;uue after the revival? The grandest
linaucial jirosperity wo have ever Iiad in
tin's country. The fin(i.st fortunes, the
largest fortunes in the United States, have
been made since 18.57. “Well,” you say,
‘'what has spiritual improvement and re
vival to do witli monetary improvement
and revival?” YIneh to do. The religion
(‘f Jesus Ghrist has a direct t.'udency to
make men honest and sober and truth tell
ing, and .at' not honesty am.l sobriety and
truth telling auxiliaries of material pr(0s-
perity
If we could have an aVvakenlng In this
country as in the days of Jonathaii Ed
wards of Northampton, as iu the days of
Dr. Finley nf Basking Ridge, a.s in ths
days of Dr. Griltlu uf Posten. tlie 'whola
land would rouse to a higher m(jrill tone,
and with that moral tone the hone.st busi-
ii>*s.s cnterpri.-iL o' *he country would eome
itli. You say a great dwilkcning has an
infuemni u[)'on the future world. 1 tcli You
it has a direct infiueneeupon the financial
w;'.lfar(‘ of this world. The religion of
(.'nnsl is lid f"e lo successful business.
It is its best triend. And If them sliould
c'(nic a. great awakening in this coun
try, and all the hanks rind insuranoe
companies ami stores ami offices and
sh(i|i.-(should close up for two xveeks and
do nothing but atteud to the puldio wor-
shi|) of Almighty God, after such a spiritual
\;-,i'.'ti(>n the. land would -wake up to such
linanciai prosperity as we liava never
dreamed of. Godliness is [dolifrible for tluT
life that ROW is as well as for that which is
to come. But, my friends, do not put too
ni'icli ernjdiasis on worldly success as t(o
|cr your eternal alTairs go at ibcce ends.
1 have nothing to say again.?t money, 'i'ho
more money you get the better, if it comes
InmcHtly iliul goes usefully. For tl]3
la(*k Ut it .Sickness dies without medi
cine. aud hunger finds its cofflu la
an einiity bread tray, and nakedness shivers
for clotlu'S and fire. All this canting tiradd*
against money, as thongli it liad no practi
cal use, when 1 licar a man indulge in it,
makce me tliink tlie best heaven for him
'vould lia ait everlasting poorhouse. No;
thcr(-is a practical use in money, but while
wc admit that we must also admit that it
■aiiiiot .sati.sfy the soul, that it cannot pay
for our ferriage across the Jordan of death,
that it cannot unlock the gate of heaveu
tor our Immortal soul.
Yet ther(i are men who act as though
pack.s of bonds and mortgages could be
Iraded off for a mausiou In heaven, and as
tiiongh gold were a legal tender in that
land where it is so common that they make
pavements out of it. Salvation by Christ
is I im only salvation. Treasures in heaven
ar(' the only ineorriiiitible treasures. Have
vi.iu ever ciphered out that sum in loss aud
gain. “What shall it profit a man if lie
g:iin the whole world and lose his soul?”
Y 'U may wear iin(.' aiiparel now, but the
Wind.s of death will flutter it lik(.’i rags.
All tlie mines of Australia and Bra";il,
stni ng in one carcanet, are not 'worth to
you as inueh as the pearl ot great price.
You reriiemb(*r, I suiipose, some years ago,
the shipwreck of the Central America? A
storm came on that vessel. The surges
tramped the deck and swept do-wii through
(ho liatclK's, and there went up a
hundred voiced 4eath shriek. The foam
ou the jaw of the wave. The pitching of
the steamer, as though it would leap a
inouiitaiu. The glare'of the signal rockets.
The long cough of the steam pijtes. The
hiss of extinguished furnaces. The walk
ing of God on the wave. Oh, it w'as a
stiii)cndous spectacle. But that ship did
not go down without a struggle. The pas
sengers stood in long lines trying to hail it
out. aud men unused to toil tugged until
their hands were blistered and their muscles
were strained. After awhile a sail came iu
sight. A few passengers got off, but the
iii'^st went down. The ship gave one lurch
and was lost.
So there are men who go on in life—a
fine voyage they are making out of it. All
is well till some euroclydon ot business
disaster comes upon them, and they go
down. The bottom of this commercial sea
is strewn with the shattered hulks. But
because your property goes shall your soul
go? Oh, no. There is coming a more
stupendous shipwreck after awhile. This
world—God launched it 6000 years ago, and
it is s.iiiing ou. Imt one day it wiil stagger
at the cry of “Fire!” and the timbers of
tim rocks will Imru, aud the mountains
ilame like masts, and the clouds like sails
in the judgment hurricane. God will take a
good many off the deck, and others out of
the lierths, where they are now sleeping in
.Tesiis. How many shall go down? No one
will know until it is announced in heaven
oue day: “.Shipwreck of a world! So many
millions saved! So many millions drowned!”
Because your fortunes go, because your
liouse goes, because all your earthly posses
sions go. do not let your soul go. May the
Lord Almighty, through the blood of the
everlasting covenant, save your soubi
They W'ant to see a revolution iu tiie
L'uited States, rheii at the proper time
England would step in and protect her
interests. The editorial referred 10
reads as follow.': “The signs of the
times indicate that before the sun risoi-^
on Janiiarj’' 1, 1900, the great American
nation will gro;ir and 'W’rite in agony of
revoliition, and the streets uf her great
cities will be slippery -with blood - a
hiindred drops of blood for each gem
that flashes ou Gie nbeks of the rich
and pampered woigen, and ten drops
of blood for each tear that has wmslicd
the face of the poor. America is
longer a repn'ire. It is a plutocracy.
The president 1.=-’ merely the creation 01
blank directors, railroad kings and coal
barrons, and ic is the same witli some
of the governor.s of the states. The
poor whine about their povertj" and
gnaw their crusts of bread but ean al
ways be relied upon to vote for the
rich, and nine-t^'nths of them would
shoulder their m iskets and lay down
iheir lives in di.^erse of the rich to
rob them. A nation such as this, in
which one million plutocrats tyrannize
over sixty million sTriVes, v,-ill be either
overthrown by a I'ereign foe or die of
gangrene. The various labor organiza
tions never think together, vote to
gether, nor work together, ami they
have no money to buy votes, lawyer.s
and judges Soldiers and police shoot
down the laborii;;' people and are
cheered on In their bloody work by
monopolists and the clergy.- p,ut the
day will soon eome xvhen there will be
a horrible dance to death, lighted up
by burning houses and the music of
cries and groans ami dynamite bombs.
Rich idlers amuse ihemselvos at New-
I'ort and Tuxedo; noor w'orkers toil
i case less'.Vof the
mine and din of the mill. Y’'oimg men
and women dwi/ddle over iced cham
pagne and oyster parties, old men and
women pick rotten food out of gar
bage Can.s. Lap dogs are driven
tlirongh Central park to take the air;
children die of overwork in filthy gar
rets. Piet.V in the YVhite House enjoy
ing the fruits or bribery—infidelity in
the tenement house enduring the pnn-
ishniCPt of uprighteousness. These are
the signs (jf the time.s in America to- |
(ia.v—signs that point to calamity too
dreadful to imagine, but which nothing
can avert.”—London Echo.
H must be confessed that there is
a certain amount of tenth in the above.
Conditions are shaping themselves in
that direction, if it cannot be averted
Ibis republic may tie destroyed. .A
great responsibility rests upon the ad
ministration. The people are looking
toward Washington for succor. If pros
perity comes soon they will not see the
“Man on Horseback.”
■Will It He 15ry«n In 1900?
The defeat of Mr. Bryan last year wa.s
n ita effects a victory. In the first place
it was a victory over Cleveiandism in
the Democratic party. It had the ef
fect of permanently separating the gold
w ing from the silver wing of the Dem
ocracy. It pointed out the place for
men like Palmer and Buckner—in the
Republican camp.
In the second place, Bryan’s defeat
was a victory over the Democratic par
ty. That great organization had lost
its virtue. As before our great war it
had been dominated by the slave pow
er, so since that time it had been rule-l
by the money power. The breaking
away of the Bryan people discovered
the encouraging fact that the reform
'Icpient constituted a large majority of
tPo -pajity membership , _
In the tLird"plac?^i^k#Ss a'victcary^
that it aroused the people to a con
sciousness of their power.
A.nd in the fourth place, it was a
victory of the reform elements of the
country in that it has shown a large
majority of the people are in favor of
bimetallism.
With these facts before us to be
considered in connection with the con
tinued popularity of Mr. Bryan as evi
denced by the demand for his services
and the attention paid to his move
ments and utterances, the unbiased ob
server cannot avoid seeing that this
man is in the midst of the political
storm center.—Ex-Senator Peffer in
Topeka Advocate.
Some people consider it hard to be
poor, but the majority of us find it
dead easy.
An Audience Faille Stricken.
At Paducah, Ky., the Casino Sum
mer Theatre, at Ramona Park has been
burned, A performance was being
given to about 600 people when the tire
broke out from a fireworks displaj^ ou
the stage. The audience was panic
stricken. Probably ox'er 100 people
■n ere injured in being burned or tramp
led. Several of the actors xvere pain
fully burned.
Lynched on «General- PrJnc
Ephriam Brinkley ivaa lynched at
Madisonville, Ky., for general bad
char&ot«r. .. _
' J THE POLITICAL DRIFT.
, ^ ■
The Ohio V alley Bimetallic
held a convention at Cincinnati June
22 and 23.—The object of the conven
tion "was to perfect an organization of
all those in favor of the free and un
limited coinage of gold and Rilv«^r. AH
clubs in the Ohio valley and contin
uous territory in Ohio, Indiana and
Kentucky •were invited to send dele
gates,
“If it takes ten years to get a cotG
stitutional amendment adopted,” said
Senator Butler, of North Carolina, “the
work cannot beiriu *00 soon.” .Senator
Butler had reference ^i^ hi*? constitu
tional amendment, introduced Thurs
day to place .a tgx on incomes. “It is
hot the first time I have taken the step,
i intrhciuced » similar ainehdment two
yeara ago, j’ust after t.fia decision was
rendered, and it was referred to the
committee on the judiciary, wiiere it
Last session I had the
sumo Sxp(“r1pnce. Now I propose to
know whether it i.= rii« intention of ihe
committee to report on my amend
ment, and if not, I want the senate th
consider it in committee of the whole.
It is very singular,” added Mr. Butler,
“thAl within a few weeks after th^
Supreme Court renders a decisioi, ad
verse to railroad combination.s a deter
mined effort should be made lo -iiish
a pooling bill through congress, while
two years have elapsed since the in
come tax was declared unconstitution
al and nothing has been done. This
is not exactly fair to the people who
have to bear the burdens, especially
w’ith a period of high taxation ap
proaching.”
The New Y"ork Central Labor Union
has sent a circular letter to central la
bor bodies in other cities asking their
opinion as to the causes of involun
tary poverty and the remedy therefor.
A big mass meeting will be held in
Neiv Y^ork to discuss the answers.
Senator Allen has often in times past
spoken against the passage of private
pension bills giving a considerable sum
p-m month to the widows of officers in
the late w’ar, while a much smaller
sum was the highest rate ever allowed
to the widow of a private soldier. He
ha.s been preparing for a speech on
this subject, in which some notable in
stances are to lie mentioned, ami that
speech will soon be ready to deliver.
Saturday he introduced a resolution
declaring against such discrimination,
and gave notice that at a later day
he V’ould address the Senate upon it.
Oregon Populists did not declare
against future union with other reform
forces; they simply resolved to retain
autonomy and hold the party in shape
to defend the party principles regard
less of whether the other elements re
main true or not. There are no Pop
ulists that want to do otherwise, and
it is the proper course.—Iowa Farmers’
Tribune.
Farmers and residents of Powell, in
Delaware county, Ohio, have banded
together in a comniunitj' of their own,
which will issue its own money, and
in such quantity as is deemed nece.s-
sary. The organization will bo called
“The Labor Exchange,” and ics money
will be good for the labor or the pro
duct of labor among members of the
community. The community will aim
to include men of every occupation so
as to be self-supporting.
THE HOME OF WILL NYE.
Summer Oiri of Jlountaiii LIt'
the Liiiid of tile .''ky.
Ashevilie. 2>. C. — July '24. — (Special j
Coir?“p(DTi(lence.) — many miles
from this place lived Bill Aye alas,
poor William, the peopl*’ about Lert?
him-well and they have .many
queer storied ivhjch they tell of him
ami many which the humorist In his
perigrination throughout lb''* pio-
turesque region would tell to them.
1 D, Wes Ny*-.'vlio ga\»• the memorable
National headquarters of the silver
Republicans will be in charge of ex-
Congressman Charles A. Towne .J)f
Ylinnesota, and for the present will be
at Duluth. The committee favored im
mediate organization for the congres
sional elections of 1898, and abso for
the campaign of 1900, and instructed
Chairman Towne to push this work as
rapidly as possible. Chairman Towne
said that the conference was better
attended than he expected, and that he
be'lieved that it indicated that the sil
ver Republicans wotild hold the bal
ance of power in the congressional and
presidential elections.
The usual symptoms of unrest in the
labor world are apparenr. On one sidq
the employes are re.sistiiig proposed
reductions in wages, and on the other
hand employers are resisting demands
for increase. The United Wood Vv’ork-
ers of the States of Yliniiesota, Michi
gan, the Dakotas, IMiuois and Wiscon
sin will make organized resistance to
,the efforts of the proposed sash and
door trust to reduce wages and oiit-
piKt. The Cleveland tin plate makers
at'^e preparing to resist demands of
'their men for better pay. These are
among the evidences of returning
prosperity.—Topeka Advocate.
Armed men prevent the passage of
citizens along public roads in Pennsyl
vania, YVar? Well, not exactly. The
private owners of mines up there want
to prevent their men from organizing
and demanding more wages, and
hired assassins to prevent any com
munications of the white Slavics with
outsiders. "No, it isn’t xvar, but it
ought to be, if necessary, to put an end
to such infernal tyranny.—Uncle Sam.
Cleveland left a legacy to McKinley,
and that was to guard well the inter
ests of Spain in Cuba, and well he is
guarding it. This is the “endless
chain” we read about, of a policy dic
tated by commercial greed.—Grand
Ranids Workman.
accouni of bow ?t au.' that Vander-i
biit happened to seL'D 1“ tio-* rare and !
rarified section of the Sou lb. )
“George aud me worked thecombnm i
tion,” he said. “Wf. have ta.stes ol j
the same biie, often a dark browu. I'm
long ou grey mattei. he has the long ■
green. We pitebod our tents side by '
side tliisi'Vove' the gvoafne'^s of men, j
to say uotiiing ui the ct-mutry round 1
.about. “ 1
But Xye iifis oasseil, and there i - no |
mou(i'.''*=i't save a cettiiire far up ibe j
river. \ andc''-d*. ‘“uian.el'n aiol like ;
old Hoiace. he has eitr**'J a i.iOnuujeM j
mote enduring than brusi, Sio’e the [
visit of Mi'.Kinley. when he reiii'C.] * (
enter the estate unlcs.s an invitimou ■..va.': [
extended to the corres] (■:idi.nt' accoiii 1
I'anying Itiiu, n‘'W..'pap,*r ine:! have ■
rather risen in the esitinati'in of ilai'.i-|
ing. the surly l .iigiish siib-umnaaer. j
and more extended courte.sies are .'h.o' o j
them.
But Biltmore is only au accessorv tea-
ture of tbig luxurious .*.ecti:>’!. li rep
resents the ai tili“ir.', .and i(((ddiig -it it
in this coutru>ted lia'hf ■'■■■'tii the limit
less wealth of nature spren-l co' iu its
grandest forms, the scene luake.s u ‘'ludy
which is interesting and not soon to b.
forgotten.
.\sheville, jUst at this season, becomes
the summer girl of the luotintair. (Utie.s.
Sh"' izets 011 a cool shirt wai.'t, with a
jaunty sailor hat and Ifcdeck.-' .bor.'olj in
the refreshing greenery of the sea‘on. ^
She looks delightfully v-ol, aud there 1
is an air of comfort and serti.r .tisfac- j
tioii in her manner that she can .i‘ i \ j
the bli'teriiig heat wliioii wiit.s her
rivals ami sends them indoors. !nste;id
of retreating from the I'UU. .Asheville
gets out and gloiies in it.- gl.nre, for it
is te iipered by a still’ bree.z-- ahich
comes down from tlo' cioviji of ihoiHi-
taius around; she goes ;i I'olfiiig, I'urs
Upin wheeling co.stiino* for a 'i 'n. uet.s
into ti-niiis pmajdiermina. or starts out
on a jaunt up the ir.cr for a try at
mountain trout.
•lust now ‘\slievil!;j i.-
of the siiiiiiuci' sea lu
t w
three luonli's
iu a siinuuer
always lively
l-rospeiity thr.ci
'1 he impuiar idi:
and
ous.
1 iui'l 1:
Senator Tilliiiaii to Speak.
the v-.-ige
lU 1 or 1 ho iiext
1 ■(• a ■. I'lSce - guv
ti-r towU is
W( i:' •;:(* air of
■ nr tile ic.'le year,
•.sheVide is errone-
•tiii'ed nlo- plac(3 ns &
small mouiitu'n ci'y, with t\.o or three
big hotels IK ar bv and Liii more and
I'.d McKissick iu tbe i>*ar ground )u-
stead, here is oue of ibe ino-t inetro-
politnl towns in iipp-ma’i-'e in the
South. The people b.ive iuU eniov-
rueiiu of iile i nc iin.'iuess 0:1. t -.I tiie
city is in tiie buitoni of .t Iingli ba'in
scooped out amoiig the ;iiountaui' and
diced ill t'Vo by tin- w .■;n ■ aiioa and
French B .(ud. Here ar mi'e of pived
streets, put douu, b. ii.i v. uy. i'v the
late General i^ieree B. 1 ouug, who
secured the coutract some y(-'ars befoie
he accepted hi.s foreign uppoiiitme^',.
From these radiate driviwiiys which
stretch in all directions an i [ eiK'trate
the encircling hil!.' am' lieiaiits. reac'n.
ing fur into tiie monutains. It is on
this range, of iiuernieiinite nills tlnit the
residence.s ami :'cs(.rtH ini'.e been built
and ou every in'otriiding knob tiicie is
some iiuije.'llo* bote! or hou.'e wbiclr
gives a good etb’cl !■•Ille g(*iK i'a! seei.e.
ihe houliicrn llaii.tay ha:s made aj
receut change in schedules, which puts l
in trains from ail sections at most con-'
venient hours|
The'Miicoii'people are taking lelvnn-
tage of a tr.aiii which leat es tliat city
at 1. 1(11). m. and get.s to tliis place at
9.45 a. la. 'i he same triiiu leaves .\sli-
eville at 9 p. m. ami arrives iu .Atlanta
at .5.10 a. m., and in Jiacou at s. 1.5
o’e lock.
Arrangements for transportuti'u; be
tween Uharleston, Savaunali aud Co
lumbia are equally couveuieiit. Ihe
train leaving hero at8.'J'la. m. gets to
('harleston at s p. m.
Drawiug room cars have been put ou
between .Incksouville, Savannah, Ash
eville aud Cincinnati. T)i« train leav
ing here at JO.', p. Hi. arrive.s in Savan
nah at .5 a. m. ami at .lirnksouville at
9.10 a. m. Leaving Saxaniii’.li at ll.li-J
p. m. aiul .Tacksonville at 7, the trip is
made to Asheville by '2.4-5 o’clock in
the afternoon.
Drawiug room cars have iieeii jilaced
on lietween New Y’ork. Idiiladelphia,
C'hattfiuooga, Baltimore, Y* ashingtou,
Salisbury and Nashville.
Leaving .Ysheville at J ;i0 o. m. the
trip is made to Chattanooga by 11.:;.5
J). m.; arriving at .Xaslitillo at'■..49
a. m. * ,
Leaving .Asheville at •?.•.' > p. m. the
trii) is made to Wa-liingt'^n at IJ a. |
m., to Laltimoro ata m . i’hiia.ld- |
phia, L2.4J p. m., ami New A urk at j
L2..02 p. 111. j
1 Trains 15 and !'! carry through I Jill- |
i man drawing cars between Norfijlk 1
1 Ibaleigh, (ireensl.oro, hattauooga aud j
Nashville. Leaving Asheville at 1.17 j
a. in., ( hatlanooga i.s rt-acbed at *
7.40 a. m. nui'l Nasliviile at i p. m. I
Leaving Asheville at •2.44 a. lu., the ;
trip is made to Greeiisburo l.y 8.30, j
I Norfolk at .5.2.5 p. m. i
I Trains 8, 5 aud 0, bet'vveen A.'-heville j
! aud M’orristown, make coniiectious j
1 with trains to aud from Memplns, New ;
I Orleans and the Soulh. lioui'le daily
; fraiuB run ou the Murpar.' 1.ranch lie-
tween Ashville and idrv'son City.
This change iu trains give excellent
connection from Asheville with all
points. Three trains come in (luring the
day from the West, and three leave in
the same direction; three come in aud
depart from t’ne South, and there are
two out aud iu from the Last aud
North.
Just now Asheville is filling up.
Crowds are coming in from all sec
tions. The season i-just on, and will
•ar.'* a JF tftkcJ u: -
Ab.^0?LW3!y Ptjr m
Ceic( r.ifC'i for •it" gT-xd leaven'
pfr. imlli mid healthfulne'-i. Absiirep
th». food •gitin“t alum and nil forms
ot fi-iaiicr.di' u I’ommon t ' tl chcaj
! ran.m. Imyel I’*akiug Fowii : ’u .
New ’ll Ilk.
THE MAKKUrS,
NEW YORK COTTON FUTl'Ur.'
Nexv Y'ork lulv '26.
Ottoll : 'let.
Yliddliug uplaiui, 7 15-!6:
; Mid ; u
Gulf -. Futures closed stra-w
High f.
lOW 1
est. est. ing
.Inlv 7 •5.' '
* ''4 b
.August 7 55 7
■■1 7 5'2
Sei'tember 7 37 7
7 ;:5
(letober 7 ‘2(1
1-2 7 G
November 7 13 7
07 7 1!.q,
1 lei-ciiiber 7 15 7
09 7 G! ’ t
.Binuarv 7.1^ 7
U2 7 ‘ l ' .
February
> '2’
Ylarcb 7-25 7
•20 7 2:6 '2-1
April
7 - ■ '
May
• • • ■•'•■•
nivERroor, coTrov m
SRKET.
Liverpool, -lulv
Middling l:
t' utures—t!lused s{(*ady
at advance.
July
.. .. 4 1 ug ’ i
.1 iilv and .August
.... 4 : -2 *■
August 1111(1 Scpt(*niber....
Se)>teniber and t letober. ..
.. . . 4 ol -
(letober and Novmuber. . -
•♦'' '■ '»
November and ileceiul er.
. . . . ■ ***
1'ei'eml'er atul .l.inuai y. . ■
.... 3 54. 55
.lauuurv and I ebnutry . ...
.... 354. .5.1
February and Ylarcli
... I >
March aud .April
April and May
OTHER ( OTUOV .M.-MIKI'I ..
Charleston. .Inly ‘26. Cott.in lirm
mi'ldling 7j.
Wilmington. July
sternly: middliug
.''■avatiiiah. .Inly '26. — ('('ttnii lirm.
middling L.
Norfolk. -Inly ‘2ii. Cotton firm
middliug'‘i,
Charlotte, .lulv *26. Strict good inn:
tiling Sj; goo.f middling. *'•*'• sir"'
iciddling ■ • middling tin. •
7 ,1/,'?; .'Jtaiiis, 7'k7L 1 lie market 1
strong. .
Columbia. .Inly *26. —(lood a'liddliug
7?; strict middling 74; midiUtnu •-y
strict low middling 7|; low mi-!
dliug .Market steady.
R.xnTIMORE PKoOri T. M.XRKKT.
Baltimore. .Inly ‘2*i. Flour (jiiici
Winter wheat patents 4 :».> to 1
spriug do4 *25 to 4 .5(1; sjtring straight
4 06 to 4 *20.
Wheat. Irreirnlar and Stead*. -Lo
sOf;to 8(ii; August 79j to '■o; stea:.'.
er No. ‘2 red 754 to 7i(; .'^dUtben i'-
sample 79 to sj; Jo on grade i'* 1 • *•
( Jirn — .Steady. Spot and luoiitii
to IBs; August :il to sept**i;ii .
;Hj tolJl.A; steamer mixed t..
exjiorts none; Southern whi'e nj.
yellow :i5*
RI'F,.
Cliarle'iton. July *26. I h»* ric*. mar
ket was quiet with 11(3 sale.s. ! In' qin
taii'ins are:
Prime 5 .u ■'•
(i(j(jd 4-.■" 1
Fair ;b k 4
( ommon u, c
N.VV.M, STORES.
(diarlestou. .Tilly *2'*. 'I'urpentm
tinn at *24 bid; uo sales. Lo-in limu. iio
sales. A, B, C and D !. 15; F. l.'jo: I
L;'>o; G 1.65; H 1.45; I 1.55; lx 1.55: M
1.65; N 1.7.5; window glas.s 1 "i; Wi.*i .
white *2.00.
Savannah, July ‘26. 1 iirpentiue liri
at •25; sales l,:i‘2.s; receij'ts. '
l-losin firm; sales 3,o60; receipt' 5, i5.:
A, B, (■ and D 1.-25; L I.;>o F I.' ■
1.40; H 1..55; K L60; M 1.65; N L*-.'.
wiinb.nv glass ■2.05; water white '2.40.
Wilmington, July *2''.. Turi entiue
firm at‘24(1/ 'Jl} ; receipts'Z'M. I!((sin lirm
at l.'2o I/.1.25; receipts4'.'. Crudeturpei.
tine 'piiet at i.8o. 1.''0 and . Jo; r(ceipt
Tar steadv at 1.15; receipt' ;5'
(■(»TT()\ sEF.o on..
New Y'ork, .Fuly '26. Cotton set
quiet but firm. I'rime summer . (
■-'4j, to off summer yellow -j 1 to
better grades ‘2s to •2'.'.
:llow
;} .
( ((REEK.
New A'ork. .Inly *2*4, ( Bitioii' open. ,
quiet at 5 points decline, nile.| ex.'ej
tionullv dull aud fiirtber dec incd - ■
(ler disappointing imw s fr'.iu i oii'
peari markets, outside .'i‘ecu;ali\e in
terests and closed (piiet atlo i » points
net decline. Sales 6.‘25o latgm. luclu •
ing .August 6.''5; ' letober 7.o5; N.nc.':.
ber 7.10. Spot Rio 'juiet; mild (piie.
Sales l,80fi bags.
srrpxh.
New York, July '26. - Haw, firm;
refining, .Of; centrifugal, '."I te.-t.
Sales tlOjCHiO tons of eeutrifugal .Mu
vado. Refined, firm. Mold .A
.utaiidard A 4j; confectioners' .A 4j,
loaf .5|.
fa:
Senator B. R. Tillman, of South Car-; brilliant than auy of former
olina, has wired his acceptance of an : years.
invitation to speak in Ylooresville, N. | __ . -
C., on the 2;ith of this month, which is j
the oav of the Mooresville picnic for ;
the ilaViuin "Springs Orphanage. The 1
Senator will prove a drawiug card, and
one of the largest crowds ever gather
ed in Mooresville is expected.
at a
a he X\ ay tf> uo it.
“What I vaut is to achieve fann
single bound.”
“Then go to Cuba and lo.se yourself.”
—Cleveland Plain Dealer,
Had a IGi;lit To.
Office Boy—Jim my. listen to the ed
itor! Ile'.s .sw' aring like a sailor.
Stenograpber—He's gut a right to;
Mr. Longhai.-. the I'Oet. wa.s in here and
left a lot of ''blank” vers'* a minute
ago.—Cincinnati Commercial Tribunes
No man looks comfurtabb* wlu n rid
ing in tlie pallbearer's carriage.
Labor Denounces Powderl.x'.
In New Y'ork the Central Labor
Fuion after a long wrangle adopted the
following; “Resolved that the appoint
ment of T. A'. Powderly as Commis-
piouer of Immigration i.s the greatest
official insult ever offered by the Fed
eral goverumeut to organized labor.”
Killed Her Itaby in a Dieain.
AIr.s. Joseph Midkiff, wife of a farmer
living near Hamlin, W. Va., dreamt-il
that .-'he was pitching brush, and taking
hold of her infant child lying besi m
tier she unconsciously pitched the lit
tle oue to the fioor. The child dievi
from the eifeota of its injuries.
Some people owe timir goml I'fp.M-
tlons to the loyalt.v of their ti'i( ini.'.